In no way am I endorsing anything political by showing
you this article that was written back in 1983. I found Colson’s analogy very
interesting about the Bible and wanted to share. I do believe he has an interesting point!
Here’s some background on
Colson for those not old enough to remember the scandal: Charles Wendell Colson, generally
referred to as Chuck Colson, was an American attorney and political advisor who
served as Special Counsel to President Richard Nixon from 1969 to 1970. Once
known as President Nixon's "hatchet man", Colson gained notoriety at
the height of the Watergate scandal, for being named as one of the Watergate
Seven, and for pleading guilty to obstruction of justice for attempting to
defame Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel Ellsberg. In 1974, he served seven
months in the federal Maxwell Prison in Alabama, as the first member of the
Nixon administration to be incarcerated for Watergate-related charges.
Colson Preaches That Watergate Proves the Bible
By Marjorie Hyer
September
28, 1983
Watergate proves the Bible is true. So says former White
House special counsel Charles Colson, convicted felon and born-again Christian,
who has drawn packed crowds to the Columbia Baptist Church in Falls Church this
week to hear his message.
The lesson of Watergate is that a lie cannot live for long,
according to Colson.
"Here were the 10 most powerful men in the United
States," he said, referring to the Watergate cover-up attempt. "With
all that power, and we couldn't contain a lie for two weeks."
Applying the Watergate scandals to the New Testament and to
current suggestions that accounts of Jesus' resurrection were a conspiracy
perpetrated by His apostles, Colson insisted: "No way."
"Take it from one who was involved in conspiracy, who
saw the frailty of man firsthand," he declared, "there is no way the
11 apostles, who were with Jesus at the time of the resurrection, could ever
have gone around for 40 years proclaiming Jesus' resurrection unless it were
true."
Had the New Testament account not been true, Colson
continued, "Peter would have been exactly like John Dean" who, he
said, led a parade of White House aides who talked to prosecutors to "save
their own skins."
If the apostles' story about the resurrection had begun to
unravel, as the Watergate cover-up did, Colson said: "They the apostles
would have sold out to save their skins."
As he preached, worshipers of all ages filled the main
sanctuary of the red and white, Colonial-style church that is the largest
Southern Baptist congregation in the area. The throng spilled into both the
social hall and the smaller sanctuary, where they watched his sermon on
closed-circuit television.
Colson, who once told a federal judge that he had been
"an arrogant self-assured man in the ruthless exercise of power,"
told the crowd that he has not forgotten what it had been like to be a powerful
man.
"I could pick up a telephone and have a jet airplane .
. . waiting for me at Andrews Air Force Base," he recalled. "I could
call up the Pentagon and give orders to people at the Pentagon. I could change
the budget."
Now, Colson said, he preaches repentance. His fast-moving
sermon was filled with reminiscence, wisecracks, and political humor.
"When I went to prison, I changed to a Democrat; I
couldn't stand the thought of seeing a Republican in jail," he explained
to about 1,500 eager listeners Monday night.
Columbia Baptist Church is spending $28,000 to sponsor
"The Life Together Crusade" that began Sunday. Colson is to speak,
for free, every night. A youth rally is scheduled for Saturday, featuring
Redskins coach Joe Gibbs and place-kicker Mark Moseley.
At the close of Colson's sermon Monday night, 25 or 30 of
the worshipers who had packed the church came forward in response to his appeal
that they commit or recommit their lives to Christ.
The church's pastor, Neal Jones, admitted to being "a
little" disappointed, but Colson, who joined Columbia Baptist Church after
he was released from jail, said he was not.
"I don't want to know the numbers, or what the
decisions were," he said afterward, adding that numbers of converts are
not important, because it is "God who deals with people."
Debra Lee
Author | Keynote Speaker | Biz & Life Coach | Blogger

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